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However, if the sequence was displayed on a monitor, it would have been reflected on the raptor (Deinonychus antirrhopus, most likely, and not the coyote-sized Velociraptor mongoliensis) in reverse.
I don't know why I always thought it was just the lighting shining through the grates above, but of course that wouldn't make sense and it wouldn't be sequence letters on the grates.
@@enscroggs monitors do not project focused beams, the light coming from a monitor is diffuse as you can check yourself with any monitor around. it's a cool movie effect that makes little sense but looks rad (see blade runner for similar scenes).
2:36 I always loved this shot of the raptor here. Even as a kid I understood that it was actively thinking and trying to figure out how to get into the vents to capture its prey. Such a chilling shot.
@@extrasoap4881I was always impressed by the lines of DNA code glowing on the raptor's skin. Definitely very chilling, & also perhaps symbolic, in a way...
always bothered me even as a kid when i saw this in the theatre....the little boy just stands there doing nothing....i remember thinking "why not pass the gun to the adults?!"
Did you try and think about how that would even work? If one of them was to take the gun, would the other even be able to hold the door to keep the Raptor out long enough for the other to shoot it? They were already struggling to keep it out with just the two of them together. So it really wouldn’t matter if Tim passed either Grant or Ellie the gun or not.
It says so much, when you think back to how excited Hammond was to see Grant and Ellie's reaction to the first dino they saw, that when Grant says here that he's decided not to endorse the park, Hammond simply says a grimly defeated, "so have I" because his dream was never worth the risk of the loss of his family or innocents.
@@nathanmcdonald610yeah the difference is night and day. I'm glad movie Hammond did not share the fate he really didn't deserve the same ending as the book Hammond
Especially when they able to levitate into the ceilings..... the raptor busts it head through the ceiling title and says there a couple seconds but then grant kicks him and he falls to the floor then has to try to jump back up to reach the ceiling.
@dannyboyNS752 I think the Raptor initially did jump up to the ceiling and that's how it got it's head in there, while using it's hands to hang on for that brief moment of time.
@@domenicgoodrick8645well I think earlier, there is a shot where the raptor is perched on top of a desk or something, But in the next shot the computer desk is gone somehow. Probably a editing error oversight or something.
The kids were great in this first film. They don’t get enough credit for the difficult roles they played! Well done young actors. I know your grown up now. But I think of you when I think of the first original film. Well done!
One of the most underrated things about the first Jurassic Park is how they never once wink to the audience or present the tone with anything less than complete sincerity. At 2:50 when Grant kicks the raptor in the face to knock it down, that could have easily felt ridiculous but it’s played dead straight and makes the scare with pulling the girl up that much more effective.
I think some people had sympathy for that poor cow put in with raptors. Yep, it’s true. That scene made me uncomfortable, Now the lawyer getting killed. ..😛
Yes, I didn't like that scene with the cow, either. They probably should not have shown that part. The cow's screaming was just too realistic.@@skylark1250
"One of the most underrated things about the first Jurassic Park is how they never once wink to the audience or present the tone with anything less than complete sincerity" - but you have watched the scenes with Dennis Nedry, right?
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ueif you mean buildings representing folders or whatever, was a genuine project forgot its name though (wasn't an OS in itself though), it's since no longer active now. Can I think still find it on the web though I'd have thought.
@@jeremysmith54565 It's just the "fsn" demo program that comes with any installation of IRIX on an SGI. I use SGIs every day, but unsurprisingly there's never any need to use fsn, though it looked cool for cinema audiences at the time I guess. However, it is a fully functional program, though other aspects of the machines and IRIX OS in the film are very much hidden or greatly simplified, eg. the actual poweron splash screen is a proper GUI interface, not some text-only prompt.
well for me when I saw that flight simulator of an os I fell in love it looked so cool shame my parents couldn't afford that system it was way to expensive so I had to settle with a windows 95 pc instead and learned IT from it
My mom , bless her soul , knew how badly I wanted to see it but being too young she had to come with me. She screamed the loudest in the theater at that moment. She hated scary/suspenseful movies and must took alto for her to take me. ❤
Best movie of the franchise by a long way. I got my parents to buy all the merchandise for this film. The duvet cover was epic. Love love this film. So ahead of it's time.
It wasn’t ahead of its time; I’d argue it was exactly perfect for its time. It’s the peak of summer popcorn flicks. Starting with JAWS & peaking with Jurassic Park. It was all downhill from there.
One of the things I loved as a kid was the architecture and interior designs in the park. Technological, modern, yet also cozy and evocative of the tropical forest environment. It made me want to just explore all those laboratory spaces and listen to the sound of the rain outside.
One more thing: terrible graphics performance. Movies like this and poor graphics performance of Unix then set the stage for a series of exiting technology and companies: Computer Graphics, GUI OS, GPU, nVidia, OpenGL, Visualization, including VM and HPC.
This movie holds tremendous place in my heart. Long story short, my deceased uncle (the black sheep of the family) came over one day, told my mom to get me ready because he was taking me out, I was 12. We ended up going to the theater, which was the ultimate luxury for me. I remember he bought me a drink & popcorn, an even bigger luxury. I watched this movie in such awe! He dropped me off & I played/pretended to be in the kitchen scene that night. It was awesome! Hubby & I are the biggest JP fans, I even have a VHS JP ornament. I’m happy that my kids thoroughly enjoy all these movies too! RIP Tio Toño, I’ll always remember you 🥹🥰
I couldn't figure out what he was saying on the second "Grant" and didn't even notice the first silent mouthing of his name, so thank you for posting this. It was driving me crazy!
@@piperjaycie Book Hammond might've said it. On the night the fences went down, he cared more about tranquilizing and recapturing the t-rex than he did about his missing grandchildren.
While nothing beats the original film, I must admit I have a soft spot for Jurassic World, if only because as a kid I asked my mom "if the raptors are so smart, why hasn't anyone tried to train them". I even gave examples of people training dangerous animals like lions to further my argument. Needless to say I was quite excited to see Blue and her pack.
@@ariadnefrolich7243 ugh. At least someone liked it. It fumbled so many times all over the movie unfortunately. If it had focused on training raptors for 75% of the movie it would've been far greater.
@@ariadnefrolich7243 Funnily enough, Chris Pratt's character and the fact raptors are just dogs in JW is why I can't stand those films, not to mention the stupid fairy tale dinosaurs like the "Indominus Rex".
Jurassic World relied on overblown CGI set pieces and cringe powdered by nostalgia. The original was a Sci-Fi thriller that artistically and technically set standards, holding up to this day
by them using a unix system in the movie shame the system cost way to much for the average family to own back then that unix system looked so cool to me as a kid
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue The linux OS (which is a free unix-based OS) came out 3 years before this, but it probably would've been very difficult for a family, nevermind a kid, to install! Unix is barely used anymore and linux has completely taken it over in popularity.
@@suspiciouschicken Welcome to Hollywood BS, lol. Unix was an old school command-line based Operating System, kind of like MS-DOS. All the graphical nonsense you see here is just Hollywood being Hollywood. MacOS today is based on a variant of UNIX. If you have access to a Mac, open up the Terminal app. That's UNIX, lol. Or, open up a Terminal in Linux, which is based on Unix. Same thing.
I love the look that Ellie gives at 4:09 . It's not just some random filler shot. It says "I left that b**ch locked in the maintenance shed!" without a single cliche line. Great movie making.
I dare you to go to Canadian tire walk up to one of their computer terminals and say as you look at it beside a Canadian tire person it's a UNIX system!!!
Here's another fun fact: the part when Lex fell thru the ceiling, that was actually a stunt person. But she mistakenly looked up while filming so Lex's face had to be superimposed over the stunt doubles face.
This would probably have been solved in 1993 with Windows 3.1 or Windows 3.11. MS-Dos did not have a comparable graphical interface and the first Windows NT variant (the forerunner of Windows 2000 and XP) was only released in the same year.
Has anyone noticed that John Hammond was able to get Ian up a flight of steps our of the bunker and in to the jeep while Hammond uses a cane and drives to the visitor center when he heard Alan, Ellie, Lex and Tim were being attacked by the raptors it shows fear can make the most difficult thing possible
@@raven4k998 it was actually a real program called File System Navigator made by Silicon Graphics to showcase the power of their workstations, but was never made commercially available
They reconstructed dinosaurs with preserved blood from 100 million year old mosquitos. Dennis Nedry was bothering to use UNIX in a system that he designed personally. Ellie Sattler needs specific instructions on how to find the breaker panel, but instantly knows her way out. Velociraptors can open doors but cannot sniff out two kids in a metal kitchen at 6' away.
This is where the audience makes the movie better. Saw this in Silicon Valley. I worked for Sun and had a bunch of people from SGI in the theatre too. Everyone laughed out loud. It was awesome.
I first watched this at home on VHS with my dad. He, too, immediately burst out laughing and tried to explain to me, a third grader, how it was not a Unix system.
@@FLMKane damn I was today years old when I learned that was an actual OS and not just some special effect they’d cooked up for the movie. UNIX basically has no graphics and is operated at the command line.
@@asmodiusjones9563Lots of UNIX OS's used GUIs. IRIX actually is UNIX and based on Unix System V. Also this 3D file manager was eventually released for Linux as "File System Visualizer"
4:08 this velociraptor was the one Ellie thought she trapped in the power switch room. But it got out somehow by learning to open doors. It terrified Ellie.
The young actor who played Tim!!!! He was young and learning the skill he chose too persue but even he didnt know he would grow up too play a certain bass guitarist in probably one of the best rock bands. Rock on!! queen
@@TheMouseAvenger bruh the gun was like inches away from the adults the kid could have just kicked it to one of them lol we’re not asking the kid to go and shoot the raptors 😂
I bet Dennis Nedry is turning in the afterlife upon finding out someone was smart enough to reboot the system and undo his crafty work, bested by a child, what a blow to the ego.
His “crafty work” wasn’t meant to be impenetrable or child resistant. As a matter of fact, the child encountered none of Nedry’s “modifications” while interacting with the system. If you recall, he has to get the embryos and deliver them to a person on a ship on the East Dock, which would take him at best 15 minutes to get there. The door locks were disabled so that he could get the embryos, and some of the fences (e.g. raptor fences excluded) so that he could get through them in the gas jeep. He intended to return, at which point I’m assuming he would have undone the modifications he made and everyone would be none the wiser. Hammond explains that shutting down the system will erase what Nedry did, as theoretically the systems will come back online in their original startup mode. When the control system was shut off, however, this now killed *all* the power to the park, including *all* the fences. When Lex was navigating the system and attempting to secure the visitor’s center, she was starting from a “fresh” boot without any of Nedry’s malicious changes.
@@andyorwig Its not that he didn't know about it, its that he wasn't sure if it would permanently destroy the entire system so he was resistant to the idea
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor I'll tell you why. Just consider how many people are involved in one movie today, hundreds of poeple at least. In the 80s and 90s there were maybe two dozen people involved. The credits lists didn't last 5-10 minutes. They lasted about 1 minute. The point is there are too many fingers in the pie now, for nearly any movie. When all these peoples livelihoods and money is involved, the producers push for something that will earn them money and be likeable to all audiences. This is what's destroying movies.
@@ianswift3521 I hadn't realized modern films were more heavily staffed than old ones. I thought it would be even the opposite, as modern tech is taking so many jobs away. I would guess you need fewer people to create and animate something through cgi than to build some animatronics and operate them
@@goliathgar4985 Great typo. And it's not really his fault. The park SUCKED. It was designed badly and failed because of that. The dinos were already breeding. The automation of everything meant a single glitch (or disgruntled employee) can jack it all up. Raptors were killing workers from the very first scene!
@@yovtobethe movie does a pretty bad version of explaining the whole chaos theory aspect of the park failing. In the book all the flaws are covered in more detail, but I guess thats to be expected with all the cut content
Luv the transition of sam's chatacter abt the kids. At 1st he didn't like them,then grew 2 care 4 them. The scene they were both napping on his shoulder was sweet
This out of nowhere T-Rex gets me all the time, like it's weights tons and you hear it over a mile, but in this moment the T-Rex sneaks in and helped in the last second 😂
I think another thing is that the characters were so focused on the velociraptors and that they were about to die that nothing else could distract them
Imagine having a PC system starved for graphic memory...using a complicated 3d file system that takes literally forever to search and open a single file.
I know a lot of people get really worked up about the graphics-heavy file manager, but it was a legit thing and was on the highest of high-end machines geared towards graphics at the time (by Silicon Graphics) and that had more than a few Gigs of ram. Which was insanely expensive at the time, but if you have it, you might as well use it. And they sure did.
These velociraptors are the real antagonists of the entire series/franchise!!!!! Nothing in any of the sequels is even scary at all other than for the Spinosaurus in JP3 because it's the only other dinosaur in the entire series/franchise that actually stalks the humans throughout the entire film like serial killer but the intelligence & ruthlessness & especially the evil look on these raptors faces is like beyond terrifying & something u don't see in any of the other 5 Jurassic films !!!!!
I can recognize John Williams score. And I didn't even know it, I am just able to recognize the same motives as in Star Wars by ear. Truly a legendary composer.
4:29 Gotta be the coolest looking raptor stance ever used in the franchise....plus this moment in general. Grant almost ate it, wonder if the other 2 would have ran out the front if the rex never came.
I think Grant tried to take the brunt of the attack. But unfortunately the other raptor would have made quick work of another, perhaps Ellie. At best, the two kids could run away whilst the adults are being torn to shreds. But then Rexy is somewhere outside...
I remember watching a “making of” program when Jurassic park came out. The bit where Ellie is falls through the ceiling and is swinging from the edge, she looks up and we see her face clearly. We weren’t supposed to. The stunt woman who did it wasn’t supposed to look up, but with the swing it was difficult to do. So they overlaid Arianna Richard’s face over the stunt woman’s face frame by frame. Sounds like nothing now, but at the time it was a major step forward to get it looking so good, and it still holds up well now
This is why not every system needs to be digital. A normal ass deadbolt would have been better than a lock that requires a LAN connection just to toggle it.
@@drl5002 Usually locks that have a digital component tend to compromise on the mechanical security of the lock itself. Just watch some of Lockpicking Lawyer's videos and he'll show you how low-security digital locks usually are. Those companies put all their time and effort into the software, usually leaving a huge flaw in the mechanics of the lock itself.
@@Quonzer I'd be curious to see him pick the jurassic park locks. They were all security card types, no "one is binding, two is in the gate, nothing on three....", here.
@@Kamina.D.Fierce yeah if you want to make dinosaurs again just only make herbivores and the only carnivore that did not be there problem was just the dilophosaurus so if anyone wants a carnivore dinosaur it’s just gonna be a Dilophosaurus
start off by lying to impress, then slowly start to be honest with her. wait you mean that's been your go-to game plan since day 1 and it hasn't worked? huh...
Ellie pushing at where the door hinges would hardly do anything. W = F•d•cos(Angle of the door). But hey, she was a doctor of Paleontology/Paleobotany and not a Physicist.
0:32 notice Tim having a panic attack and jumping up & down with his hands on his head. He therefore was in no position to help the adults with the Spas-12
Software developer: but sir the 3d graphics really dont help navigate any faster. In fact its pretty choppy at times. Boss: but its a unix system Developer: what?
Being fair, when the electricity billing system at work was being redeveloped, the users on the nice looking new gui front end were far slower than on the old 3270 mainframe terminals
It's been years since I've read the novel, but the whole scene was different from what was in the film. In the novel, it was some kind of weird text based, touch display screen that Tim used to access the park's computer systems. As for Lex, I can't quite remember what she did during that scene, as the novel was focused on Tim getting around the system. While the film is great, the novel is a completely different beast, and more violent than what was seen in theaters.
In the novel Lex actually delivers one of her best lines during this scene. She tells Tim "well if you know what to do, then DO it!". So bossy for a little eight year old girl.
If it used Windows in the park: *starts computer Windows: "Wait while we configure your windows" Dr. Grant: "hurry!!" Windows: "Updating Windows, please do not turn off your computer" Dr. Grant: "We can't hold much longer!!" Windows: "Welcome to Windows" *girl starts park program Windows: *Loading Dr. Grant: "Ah!! They scratched me!! The pain!!" Windows: *Still loading Dr. Grant: "Aaaaah!!! They are eating me alive!!" Windows: *finally loads program *girl presses main directory Windows: *loading Dr. Grant: *chocking on his own blood Windows: *finally opens directory *girl chooses door automatic system Windows: *blue screen
Anyone else see the picture of Oppenheimer that's taped to the computer? Dunno why it's there, but is it a subtle tie in to the movie's Promethean themes of meddling around with science and technology that should be best left alone?
There's another scene in the film that has a close-up of that photo. There are post-it notes attached to it, with a thought balloon of a mushroom cloud and "Start of the baby boomers". Which is a cute little joke, and accurate...the baby boomers *did* start with a boom, as they were a result of WWII ending with the nuclear bomb. And it's also a commentary on humans fucking with technology in dangerous ways, as you said.
At that time I managed to find the binary for the 3D file browser used in that scene. If I remember correctly, it run on Sun workstations. It was slow and kind of buggy. It was cool, though.
Would that work? He did that with the young female raptor (Beta) in Dominion, but take note, that Beta is the daughter of Blue and Blue is one of the four, that Owen Grady personally worked with and kinda successfully "tamed", so Blue might taught her daugter, how to behave according to her own experiences. Whereas JP's raptors were not trained, not at all. They were completely wild, held up in "a cage" for their whole life. Crichton's novel elaborates on this quite more, it even spreads to the second novel, where the author (through the eyes of Ian Malcolm) observes and makes the differences between raptors from the park (first book) and the raptors on Isla Sorna (2nd book), he points out, that in the park, they were unorganized, wild, had no parent figures, that would teach them, how to react to something. On Isla Sorna, there was a 2nd or 3rd generation of wild raptors, completely raised by their parents, not creatures held in cells, there were no (working) electric fences on the 2nd island. Those animals were natural, unlike the park's ones. So yea, if Grant tried that trick (if he ever knew about it), then he might have ended like poor Hoskins.
It’s really incredible how much storyline they put within 5 min. That in itself is an incredible feat. This film will be remembered as the top 5th film ever made right alongside Godfather and Casablanca.
@@Wednesdaywoe1975 i'm just saying the when Rexy surprise attacks the Raptors out of nowhere was a better solution for that scene it's also good because it may have the audience a good jump scare
I always thought he was screaming, “Don’t!”. So I thought it was a Don’t kill the raptors because they are so expensive scream! I still can’t hear “Grant”, but maybe it’s the accent.
Interesting grip the Velociraptor has on the door @ 1:09 with both it's claws facing inward towards the door, because from that position all it could have done is PULL the door shut and not PUSH the door open.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor It's standing directly in front of the door facing the window, and not sideways like a human would stand if he was pushing against it with his shoulder.
I'm curious where they got all the door handles that turn together. All doors I've seen with that style doorknob, they moved independently and one did not turn the other.
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Honestly all the JP movies has some dumb scenes that have us fans like wtf
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Wlwlwoe❤
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2:37 the projection of that DNA sequence is such a great effect
I've watched this movie countless times, and I think I just noticed this.
However, if the sequence was displayed on a monitor, it would have been reflected on the raptor (Deinonychus antirrhopus, most likely, and not the coyote-sized Velociraptor mongoliensis) in reverse.
I don't know why I always thought it was just the lighting shining through the grates above, but of course that wouldn't make sense and it wouldn't be sequence letters on the grates.
fucking speilberg
@@enscroggs monitors do not project focused beams, the light coming from a monitor is diffuse as you can check yourself with any monitor around. it's a cool movie effect that makes little sense but looks rad (see blade runner for similar scenes).
2:36 I always loved this shot of the raptor here. Even as a kid I understood that it was actively thinking and trying to figure out how to get into the vents to capture its prey. Such a chilling shot.
i love the shadows of the vents falling on its face too, ominous indeed. great cinematography!
@@extrasoap4881I was always impressed by the lines of DNA code glowing on the raptor's skin. Definitely very chilling, & also perhaps symbolic, in a way...
The creation that kills its creator @@TheMouseAvenger
What is the text on its face?
@@TheVFXbyArtDNA code sequences
always bothered me even as a kid when i saw this in the theatre....the little boy just stands there doing nothing....i remember thinking "why not pass the gun to the adults?!"
Ikr that's exactly what I thought too.
I don't think they could have gotten a clean shot in time with a SPAS 12 with a wonky extractor
Did you try and think about how that would even work? If one of them was to take the gun, would the other even be able to hold the door to keep the Raptor out long enough for the other to shoot it? They were already struggling to keep it out with just the two of them together. So it really wouldn’t matter if Tim passed either Grant or Ellie the gun or not.
@@MoonPrismStudios wouldn’t matter since they would shoot it if it got inside
@@TS-ij3cz Not very likely…. They’d probably end up being killed.
It says so much, when you think back to how excited Hammond was to see Grant and Ellie's reaction to the first dino they saw, that when Grant says here that he's decided not to endorse the park, Hammond simply says a grimly defeated, "so have I" because his dream was never worth the risk of the loss of his family or innocents.
Boy you should read the book, Hammond was a COMPLETELY different character.
@@nathanmcdonald610yeah the difference is night and day. I'm glad movie Hammond did not share the fate he really didn't deserve the same ending as the book Hammond
In the book Hammond's a raging narcissist who blames the park's failures on everyone around him.
I love the raptor's reaction when Grant kicks out the ladder. It's like "Really? That's your plan?"
Especially when they able to levitate into the ceilings..... the raptor busts it head through the ceiling title and says there a couple seconds but then grant kicks him and he falls to the floor then has to try to jump back up to reach the ceiling.
@dannyboyNS752 I think the Raptor initially did jump up to the ceiling and that's how it got it's head in there, while using it's hands to hang on for that brief moment of time.
@@domenicgoodrick8645well I think earlier, there is a shot where the raptor is perched on top of a desk or something, But in the next shot the computer desk is gone somehow. Probably a editing error oversight or something.
@dannyboyNS752 When the raptor's heads appears you can clearly see the raptor holding itself up with its claws
The kids were great in this first film. They don’t get enough credit for the difficult roles they played! Well done young actors. I know your grown up now. But I think of you when I think of the first original film. Well done!
🎥
Not the little boy
@AppalachianSpring spell check again. Spell check doesn’t check for usage in a sentence.
@@skylark1250 no bc they’re right though
@@bgc3864 why?
The ending when Rexy is roaring as the “When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth” banner falls is IMO one of if not THE greatest scene in all of movie history
Makes me go, "YEEEESSSS!!!!" ✊🏻
Gave me chills, literally almost cried
@@369284ab
She's a good girl. Especially for a Tyrant Lizard. 🦖
i LOVED it too when she threw the raptor onto the (presumably) T-Rex skeleton, all "I'M the boss, I'M the real BREATHING ANIMAL, not a pile of bones!"
True.
One of the most underrated things about the first Jurassic Park is how they never once wink to the audience or present the tone with anything less than complete sincerity.
At 2:50 when Grant kicks the raptor in the face to knock it down, that could have easily felt ridiculous but it’s played dead straight and makes the scare with pulling the girl up that much more effective.
I think some people had sympathy for that poor cow put in with raptors. Yep, it’s true. That scene made me uncomfortable, Now the lawyer getting killed. ..😛
Yes, I didn't like that scene with the cow, either. They probably should not have shown that part. The cow's screaming was just too realistic.@@skylark1250
What do you mean, 'they never once wink to the audience'?
"One of the most underrated things about the first Jurassic Park is how they never once wink to the audience or present the tone with anything less than complete sincerity" - but you have watched the scenes with Dennis Nedry, right?
That’s what I like about older movies in general - they’re so earnest and don’t feel the need to lampshade or wink at the audience all the time
As a kid this movie had me convinced that navigating through computer files would be stressful
can you imagine having that flight simulator as an os instead of windows🤣
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ueif you mean buildings representing folders or whatever, was a genuine project forgot its name though (wasn't an OS in itself though), it's since no longer active now. Can I think still find it on the web though I'd have thought.
@@jeremysmith54565 It's just the "fsn" demo program that comes with any installation of IRIX on an SGI. I use SGIs every day, but unsurprisingly there's never any need to use fsn, though it looked cool for cinema audiences at the time I guess. However, it is a fully functional program, though other aspects of the machines and IRIX OS in the film are very much hidden or greatly simplified, eg. the actual poweron splash screen is a proper GUI interface, not some text-only prompt.
It's worse in reality. Search for a file can still take 20 minutes and turn up nothing if you don't know the exact name or where to look.
well for me when I saw that flight simulator of an os I fell in love it looked so cool shame my parents couldn't afford that system it was way to expensive so I had to settle with a windows 95 pc instead and learned IT from it
As a velocirapror, I can confirm we really hate the UNIX system.
But it open way to open source world
If it's Windows, it will force you upgrade the system.
even left the door unlocked :/
Why though? UNIX evangelists are mostly dinosaurs.
@@camrobertson1886 Yes, Linux is better
2:59 I screamed when Lex almost got caught and bitten by the raptor. Actually, the whole theater screamed with me. Oh God those were the days.
Agreed.
My mom , bless her soul , knew how badly I wanted to see it but being too young she had to come with me. She screamed the loudest in the theater at that moment. She hated scary/suspenseful movies and must took alto for her to take me. ❤
Imagine if she got it big off.
Best movie of the franchise by a long way. I got my parents to buy all the merchandise for this film. The duvet cover was epic. Love love this film. So ahead of it's time.
Did they also buy an UNIX system?
It wasn’t ahead of its time; I’d argue it was exactly perfect for its time. It’s the peak of summer popcorn flicks. Starting with JAWS & peaking with Jurassic Park. It was all downhill from there.
One of the things I loved as a kid was the architecture and interior designs in the park. Technological, modern, yet also cozy and evocative of the tropical forest environment. It made me want to just explore all those laboratory spaces and listen to the sound of the rain outside.
You are right, the setting is so interesting.
Very Costa Rican.
The computer scene proves two things... someone needs to hire that girl, and someone needs to fire whoever set up computer security in that place.
Pretty sure that was Nedry, and well, I think it's a little late for that.
did.. did you not watch the movie?
One more thing: terrible graphics performance. Movies like this and poor graphics performance of Unix then set the stage for a series of exiting technology and companies: Computer Graphics, GUI OS, GPU, nVidia, OpenGL, Visualization, including VM and HPC.
@@hengzhou4566what u expect system back in 1995 with graphics good or bad.
@@QWERTY28875actually 1993
This movie holds tremendous place in my heart.
Long story short, my deceased uncle (the black sheep of the family) came over one day, told my mom to get me ready because he was taking me out, I was 12. We ended up going to the theater, which was the ultimate luxury for me. I remember he bought me a drink & popcorn, an even bigger luxury.
I watched this movie in such awe! He dropped me off & I played/pretended to be in the kitchen scene that night. It was awesome!
Hubby & I are the biggest JP fans, I even have a VHS JP ornament. I’m happy that my kids thoroughly enjoy all these movies too!
RIP Tio Toño, I’ll always remember you 🥹🥰
5:00: "Mr Hammond! After careful consideration, I've decided, not to endorse your park." "So have I."
I'm fairly convinced I would have reached that same conclusion. Nearly dying might do that to you.
I love how the most replayed section is "Grant? GRANT!!!"
Why not? He's so convincing. I miss when actors and actresses went all in on stuff like that. Lol
I couldn't figure out what he was saying on the second "Grant" and didn't even notice the first silent mouthing of his name, so thank you for posting this. It was driving me crazy!
I thought he was saying “Don’t” and could never understand why? Like I thought Hammond didn’t want Grant to shoot the raptors?!
@@piperjaycie Book Hammond might've said it. On the night the fences went down, he cared more about tranquilizing and recapturing the t-rex than he did about his missing grandchildren.
@@piperjayciehe’s hard to understand. Even when I watched this scene on Amazon Prime, the subtitles just say “(screams)” lol
Watching this scene I can’t help thinking this movie is so much better than the sequels that followed.
While nothing beats the original film, I must admit I have a soft spot for Jurassic World, if only because as a kid I asked my mom "if the raptors are so smart, why hasn't anyone tried to train them". I even gave examples of people training dangerous animals like lions to further my argument.
Needless to say I was quite excited to see Blue and her pack.
@@ariadnefrolich7243 ugh. At least someone liked it. It fumbled so many times all over the movie unfortunately. If it had focused on training raptors for 75% of the movie it would've been far greater.
@@ariadnefrolich7243 Funnily enough, Chris Pratt's character and the fact raptors are just dogs in JW is why I can't stand those films, not to mention the stupid fairy tale dinosaurs like the "Indominus Rex".
This movie the second and third are the best. The ones after sucked. All
Of them.
Jurassic World relied on overblown CGI set pieces and cringe powdered by nostalgia. The original was a Sci-Fi thriller that artistically and technically set standards, holding up to this day
As a former UNIX analyst of some 22 years, I was greatly amused by this.
by them using a unix system in the movie shame the system cost way to much for the average family to own back then that unix system looked so cool to me as a kid
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue The linux OS (which is a free unix-based OS) came out 3 years before this, but it probably would've been very difficult for a family, nevermind a kid, to install! Unix is barely used anymore and linux has completely taken it over in popularity.
Wtf is it?
@@suspiciouschicken Welcome to Hollywood BS, lol. Unix was an old school command-line based Operating System, kind of like MS-DOS. All the graphical nonsense you see here is just Hollywood being Hollywood. MacOS today is based on a variant of UNIX. If you have access to a Mac, open up the Terminal app. That's UNIX, lol. Or, open up a Terminal in Linux, which is based on Unix. Same thing.
@@suspiciouschicken Silicon Graphics 3D File System Navigator
The shot at 2:38 of the raptor with the nucleic acid letters all over it is just fucking genius cinematography
I never knew what those letters were but always loved how that scene looked!
@@damaracarpenter8316 these are DNA sequences(A T C G)
I love the look that Ellie gives at 4:09 . It's not just some random filler shot. It says "I left that b**ch locked in the maintenance shed!" without a single cliche line. Great movie making.
I dare you to go to Canadian tire walk up to one of their computer terminals and say as you look at it beside a Canadian tire person it's a UNIX system!!!
Indeed! ^_^
BTW, how *DID* Raptor 1 get out of the shed, anyway? 🤔
@@raven4k998 what does that have to do with Jurassic Park?
@@raven4k998 This is oddly specific. Does Canadian Tire still use UNIX system(s)?
@@TheMouseAvenger It opened the door.
Here's another fun fact: the part when Lex fell thru the ceiling, that was actually a stunt person. But she mistakenly looked up while filming so Lex's face had to be superimposed over the stunt doubles face.
and now thats done all the time
Why didn't they like...reshoot it in 10 minutes?
"It's a UNIX system!" Well thank God it wasn't a DOS system!
Also, I thought the Oppenheimer photo on the monitor was a nice touch. It's so fitting.
This would probably have been solved in 1993 with Windows 3.1 or Windows 3.11. MS-Dos did not have a comparable graphical interface and the first Windows NT variant (the forerunner of Windows 2000 and XP) was only released in the same year.
I still don't understand that. How could she now consider herself an authority on it. UNIX was an entire system. It wasn't a program or file.
@@stephaniegormley9982, it's my understanding that Lex is a proficient computer hacker.
Has anyone noticed that John Hammond was able to get Ian up a flight of steps our of the bunker and in to the jeep while Hammond uses a cane and drives to the visitor center when he heard Alan, Ellie, Lex and Tim were being attacked by the raptors it shows fear can make the most difficult thing possible
it's a UNIX system that just happens to look like a flight simulator🤣🤣🤣
@@raven4k998 it was actually a real program called File System Navigator made by Silicon Graphics to showcase the power of their workstations, but was never made commercially available
@@ZeeZedZee yeah but those computers cost way to much so that is probably why it never took off🤣
They reconstructed dinosaurs with preserved blood from 100 million year old mosquitos. Dennis Nedry was bothering to use UNIX in a system that he designed personally. Ellie Sattler needs specific instructions on how to find the breaker panel, but instantly knows her way out. Velociraptors can open doors but cannot sniff out two kids in a metal kitchen at 6' away.
@@raven4k998spared no expense!
This is where the audience makes the movie better. Saw this in Silicon Valley. I worked for Sun and had a bunch of people from SGI in the theatre too. Everyone laughed out loud. It was awesome.
I first watched this at home on VHS with my dad. He, too, immediately burst out laughing and tried to explain to me, a third grader, how it was not a Unix system.
Did they like the fact that Dennis Nedry was using UNIX. I wonder what gave them the best laugh.
@@asmodiusjones9563it's Irix isn't it?
@@FLMKane damn I was today years old when I learned that was an actual OS and not just some special effect they’d cooked up for the movie. UNIX basically has no graphics and is operated at the command line.
@@asmodiusjones9563Lots of UNIX OS's used GUIs. IRIX actually is UNIX and based on Unix System V.
Also this 3D file manager was eventually released for Linux as "File System Visualizer"
This girl, Ariana Richards, grew up to become the most amazing oil painter. She’s amazing.
And the boy played her sibling, Joe Mazello, went on to portraying Queen bassist John Deacon
@@roelmd8907I know, I nearly fangirl squee'd when I saw his name in the credits! ^_^
She is! ^_^ I just looked at her works on Google Images -- they're all just so gorgeous! 🥰
She paints? I didn’t know that…..
She’ll be doing water colours once the smell of oil paint effects her head in a dizzy way. It’s what happens to my grandmother.
That end with the T-Rex Roaring in Victory is nothing less than Iconic.
How did it get in a doorway though.....
@@skillsmachine9164 He made his own doorway!😄
@derekdanie4737 silently so no one heard haha?
4:08 this velociraptor was the one Ellie thought she trapped in the power switch room. But it got out somehow by learning to open doors. It terrified Ellie.
that’s the Big One, the one Muldoon says killed the other raptors when she was brought into the original paddock.
@@jedi_.66 The Big One was the one in the Control Room.
Wonder which one has Muldoon inside it 😭😭
Oh the T-Rex, always the hero! Always loved that part.
0:14 Raptor: *"HAI!"*
The young actor who played Tim!!!! He was young and learning the skill he chose too persue but even he didnt know he would grow up too play a certain bass guitarist in probably one of the best rock bands. Rock on!! queen
Before that he would do time on the pacific
1993 was a more innocent time. A time when being able to navigate an unfamiliar user interface was all it took to be a "hacker." :)
Yeah my dad is a Stanford level programmer and he laughs whenever he sees this scene
0:58 Go ahead and move. You're on the HINGE side, you're not making a difference anyway.
If I've said it once I've said it a thousand times.......Timmy, GIVE THEM THE DAMN GUN!!!!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
One of them would still have to let go of the door and shoot the raptor.
Even if he did, it wouldn’t have done any good when all the adults have aim 10 times worse than a stormtrooper!
Yes let's give a child a 10 pound shotgun
But Joe Mazzello asked once, "Would YOU trust an 8-year-old with a gun?"
@@TheMouseAvenger bruh the gun was like inches away from the adults the kid could have just kicked it to one of them lol we’re not asking the kid to go and shoot the raptors 😂
I bet Dennis Nedry is turning in the afterlife upon finding out someone was smart enough to reboot the system and undo his crafty work, bested by a child, what a blow to the ego.
His “crafty work” wasn’t meant to be impenetrable or child resistant. As a matter of fact, the child encountered none of Nedry’s “modifications” while interacting with the system.
If you recall, he has to get the embryos and deliver them to a person on a ship on the East Dock, which would take him at best 15 minutes to get there. The door locks were disabled so that he could get the embryos, and some of the fences (e.g. raptor fences excluded) so that he could get through them in the gas jeep. He intended to return, at which point I’m assuming he would have undone the modifications he made and everyone would be none the wiser.
Hammond explains that shutting down the system will erase what Nedry did, as theoretically the systems will come back online in their original startup mode.
When the control system was shut off, however, this now killed *all* the power to the park, including *all* the fences.
When Lex was navigating the system and attempting to secure the visitor’s center, she was starting from a “fresh” boot without any of Nedry’s malicious changes.
Question was: Why didn't Arnold know this?
@@andyorwig
Its not that he didn't know about it, its that he wasn't sure if it would permanently destroy the entire system so he was resistant to the idea
Man, this is when movies were actually good
Yeah the 80's and the 90's were the best times, when cgi usage was limited and replicas were still used for many scenes
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor I'll tell you why. Just consider how many people are involved in one movie today, hundreds of poeple at least. In the 80s and 90s there were maybe two dozen people involved. The credits lists didn't last 5-10 minutes. They lasted about 1 minute. The point is there are too many fingers in the pie now, for nearly any movie. When all these peoples livelihoods and money is involved, the producers push for something that will earn them money and be likeable to all audiences. This is what's destroying movies.
@@ianswift3521 I hadn't realized modern films were more heavily staffed than old ones. I thought it would be even the opposite, as modern tech is taking so many jobs away. I would guess you need fewer people to create and animate something through cgi than to build some animatronics and operate them
After careful consideration I've decided NOT to endorse your park." "So have I." Can't help but feel sad for Hammond in this moment.
Thanks to that hacker Nerdy, he destroyed the whole park
@@goliathgar4985 Great typo. And it's not really his fault. The park SUCKED. It was designed badly and failed because of that. The dinos were already breeding. The automation of everything meant a single glitch (or disgruntled employee) can jack it all up. Raptors were killing workers from the very first scene!
didn't he die in the book?
@@lagrangewei Yes. But he's also more of a cold hearted business man then a idealistic dreamer in the book, so I didn't feel as bad for book Hammond.
@@yovtobethe movie does a pretty bad version of explaining the whole chaos theory aspect of the park failing. In the book all the flaws are covered in more detail, but I guess thats to be expected with all the cut content
Girl: “It’s a unix system…I know this!”
Velociraptor: “That makes two of us.”
*hacking battle montage ensues*
Every scene of this movie is iconic
Luv the transition of sam's chatacter abt the kids. At 1st he didn't like them,then grew 2 care 4 them. The scene they were both napping on his shoulder was sweet
2:02 When Hammond asked if the children are alright he was referring to the raptors 😅😮
No. He meant his grandchildren Lex and Tim.
hahahah
This out of nowhere T-Rex gets me all the time, like it's weights tons and you hear it over a mile, but in this moment the T-Rex sneaks in and helped in the last second 😂
She tippy toed in in her ballerina shoes 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
That’s how it was with the Mosasaur in Jurassic World.
I think another thing is that the characters were so focused on the velociraptors and that they were about to die that nothing else could distract them
To be fair they were a biiiiiiiiit distracted by the raptors right in front and behind them.
@@mattchoman9737 it was making the earth shake, they would have noticed it. The future movies did away with that effect.
Imagine having a PC system starved for graphic memory...using a complicated 3d file system that takes literally forever to search and open a single file.
Well, that file manager only runs on a SiliconGraphics system so was probably among the best graphics you could get at the time
I know a lot of people get really worked up about the graphics-heavy file manager, but it was a legit thing and was on the highest of high-end machines geared towards graphics at the time (by Silicon Graphics) and that had more than a few Gigs of ram. Which was insanely expensive at the time, but if you have it, you might as well use it. And they sure did.
@@writershard5065 "Spared no expense"
These velociraptors are the real antagonists of the entire series/franchise!!!!! Nothing in any of the sequels is even scary at all other than for the Spinosaurus in JP3 because it's the only other dinosaur in the entire series/franchise that actually stalks the humans throughout the entire film like serial killer but the intelligence & ruthlessness & especially the evil look on these raptors faces is like beyond terrifying & something u don't see in any of the other 5 Jurassic films !!!!!
I miss those days when movies used to be this good 😢
First learn English then leave a comment
LOL!!!
I can recognize John Williams score. And I didn't even know it, I am just able to recognize the same motives as in Star Wars by ear. Truly a legendary composer.
This looks so real even after 30 years i cant believe it
Alan: "After a careful consideration, I've decided not to endorse your park."
John: "So have I."
🌴🌳🎋
What baffles me is the special effects that are realistic unlike the ones today...
One of the most intense movies of all time.
I'm so happy I grew up watching this!! Some of the most thrilling movie moments of my life!!
4:29 Gotta be the coolest looking raptor stance ever used in the franchise....plus this moment in general. Grant almost ate it, wonder if the other 2 would have ran out the front if the rex never came.
I think Grant tried to take the brunt of the attack. But unfortunately the other raptor would have made quick work of another, perhaps Ellie. At best, the two kids could run away whilst the adults are being torn to shreds. But then Rexy is somewhere outside...
I remember watching a “making of” program when Jurassic park came out.
The bit where Ellie is falls through the ceiling and is swinging from the edge, she looks up and we see her face clearly. We weren’t supposed to. The stunt woman who did it wasn’t supposed to look up, but with the swing it was difficult to do. So they overlaid Arianna Richard’s face over the stunt woman’s face frame by frame. Sounds like nothing now, but at the time it was a major step forward to get it looking so good, and it still holds up well now
@4:38 the velociraptor disappears for just one frame while the T-rex chomps on it. This render error is in the final version of the film.
This is why not every system needs to be digital. A normal ass deadbolt would have been better than a lock that requires a LAN connection just to toggle it.
It wouldn't be that hard to have something that can be triggered by the computer to also be able to be manually operated.
@@drl5002 Usually locks that have a digital component tend to compromise on the mechanical security of the lock itself. Just watch some of Lockpicking Lawyer's videos and he'll show you how low-security digital locks usually are. Those companies put all their time and effort into the software, usually leaving a huge flaw in the mechanics of the lock itself.
@@Quonzer I'd be curious to see him pick the jurassic park locks. They were all security card types, no "one is binding, two is in the gate, nothing on three....", here.
@@drl5002 Oh you'd be surprised what LPL can do.
Lpl cant get past a digital lock which is fully digital. Where's the video of him picking a usual security door (maglock)😂
2:14 GRAANT!
It still blows my mind how anyone thought cloning the carnivores was a good idea... ESPECIALLY the damn raptors.
@@Kamina.D.Fierce yeah if you want to make dinosaurs again just only make herbivores and the only carnivore that did not be there problem was just the dilophosaurus so if anyone wants a carnivore dinosaur it’s just gonna be a Dilophosaurus
@@miketurik9404some people can’t resist the thrill of staring down apex predators, unfortunately.
I want a relationship as strong as that drop ceiling.
start off by lying to impress, then slowly start to be honest with her.
wait you mean that's been your go-to game plan since day 1 and it hasn't worked? huh...
A relationship that strong is incompatible with knowledge of UNIX systems 😅
最後にジュラシックパークの横断幕が降ってくるのホントに皮肉が効いてて名シーンだわ
iconic
Ellie pushing at where the door hinges would hardly do anything. W = F•d•cos(Angle of the door). But hey, she was a doctor of Paleontology/Paleobotany and not a Physicist.
I worked with a guy that called his Mom after he had gone on a date. He proclaimed to his mother with tears in his eyes "Mom.. She knows UNIX".
0:32 notice Tim having a panic attack and jumping up & down with his hands on his head.
He therefore was in no position to help the adults with the Spas-12
I from 1990 and this is my infancy!!!! That roar and incredible CGI marks me for ever
Still my favorite Jurassic park movie out of all of them this part used to make me jump when I was a kid 2:59😂
Software developer: but sir the 3d graphics really dont help navigate any faster. In fact its pretty choppy at times.
Boss: but its a unix system
Developer: what?
FSN was whack
Being fair, when the electricity billing system at work was being redeveloped, the users on the nice looking new gui front end were far slower than on the old 3270 mainframe terminals
Hacking skills on early 90s computers: being able to point and click in a graphical user interface.
"It's a UNIX system, I know this" Wow.....iconic words.
90s kid's old memories ❤️❤️❤️❤️
It's been years since I've read the novel, but the whole scene was different from what was in the film. In the novel, it was some kind of weird text based, touch display screen that Tim used to access the park's computer systems. As for Lex, I can't quite remember what she did during that scene, as the novel was focused on Tim getting around the system. While the film is great, the novel is a completely different beast, and more violent than what was seen in theaters.
The kids' ages were reversed too.
I read the novel too and I think the movie is much much better.
I read the novel about a year before seeing the film, and there are some notable differences. In the novel for instance, John Hammond dies.
@@19580822 Malcolm too
In the novel Lex actually delivers one of her best lines during this scene. She tells Tim "well if you know what to do, then DO it!". So bossy for a little eight year old girl.
"Are the children alright?" Nah bro, lex got eaten by the t-rex and we threw tim to a raptor to escape lol
Hahahahaha 🤣
😂😂😂
@@kayc421Hammond at 2:14. Alan and Ellie escape on the chopper and say Hammond and Malcolm died. 😂
the children are FINE.
If it used Windows in the park:
*starts computer
Windows: "Wait while we configure your windows"
Dr. Grant: "hurry!!"
Windows: "Updating Windows, please do not turn off your computer"
Dr. Grant: "We can't hold much longer!!"
Windows: "Welcome to Windows"
*girl starts park program
Windows: *Loading
Dr. Grant: "Ah!! They scratched me!! The pain!!"
Windows: *Still loading
Dr. Grant: "Aaaaah!!! They are eating me alive!!"
Windows: *finally loads program
*girl presses main directory
Windows: *loading
Dr. Grant: *chocking on his own blood
Windows: *finally opens directory
*girl chooses door automatic system
Windows: *blue screen
Lol, it killed me that she pushes the door near the hinges.
I love in the velociraptor sticks his head under the plastic sheet, he’s like “peekaboo” 😂
the eunuchs sure did a good job dino-proofing their computer systems
Anyone else see the picture of Oppenheimer that's taped to the computer? Dunno why it's there, but is it a subtle tie in to the movie's Promethean themes of meddling around with science and technology that should be best left alone?
There's another scene in the film that has a close-up of that photo. There are post-it notes attached to it, with a thought balloon of a mushroom cloud and "Start of the baby boomers".
Which is a cute little joke, and accurate...the baby boomers *did* start with a boom, as they were a result of WWII ending with the nuclear bomb. And it's also a commentary on humans fucking with technology in dangerous ways, as you said.
I LOVE the design of the visitors centre. It is so 90s modern clutch
wow, the way she dished out that Unix code was a amazing!!!
At that time I managed to find the binary for the 3D file browser used in that scene. If I remember correctly, it run on Sun workstations. It was slow and kind of buggy. It was cool, though.
"Here, I'll push against the door hinges where it helps the least!" 🤣
And all Grant had to do was hold his hand up to control the raptors.
Would that work? He did that with the young female raptor (Beta) in Dominion, but take note, that Beta is the daughter of Blue and Blue is one of the four, that Owen Grady personally worked with and kinda successfully "tamed", so Blue might taught her daugter, how to behave according to her own experiences. Whereas JP's raptors were not trained, not at all. They were completely wild, held up in "a cage" for their whole life. Crichton's novel elaborates on this quite more, it even spreads to the second novel, where the author (through the eyes of Ian Malcolm) observes and makes the differences between raptors from the park (first book) and the raptors on Isla Sorna (2nd book), he points out, that in the park, they were unorganized, wild, had no parent figures, that would teach them, how to react to something. On Isla Sorna, there was a 2nd or 3rd generation of wild raptors, completely raised by their parents, not creatures held in cells, there were no (working) electric fences on the 2nd island. Those animals were natural, unlike the park's ones. So yea, if Grant tried that trick (if he ever knew about it), then he might have ended like poor Hoskins.
@@Croftice1 well damn
That’s Owen not grant
That banner drop will always remain EPIC for centuries..
4:15 That creature was following it's preys. It never got to understand, something else was following it.
It’s really incredible how much storyline they put within 5 min. That in itself is an incredible feat. This film will be remembered as the top 5th film ever made right alongside Godfather and Casablanca.
What r the other 2
The end of this scene demonstrates why the movie was better than the book
Crichton wrote books to pay his way through school. He wasn't trying to be good, just publishable.
@@Wednesdaywoe1975 i'm just saying the when Rexy surprise attacks the Raptors out of nowhere was a better solution for that scene it's also good because it may have the audience a good jump scare
1993 in theaters - T-rex biting that raptor 4:36 must've been so many applauds from the audience. Best anti-hero character.
"Go!!! I'll hold them off!!!"
2:37 four nucleotide bases of DNA (A-C-G-T) over it's face. Nice detail
2:11 In league with "GIVE ME BACK MY SON!" and "AAAAAALLLLL OF THEEEEEEEEM."
2:37 that’s weird, you can see GTCA letters from DNA projecting onto the surface of the velociraptors
I've seen this in theater and on DVD and never seen it before. I assume it must be part of a remaster or something.
haven’t you always known that?
@@KenS1267 Weird I remember it from the VHS I grew up on.
Lmao, my Mum read the books but still went to see it in the theatre, 😅😅she hid behind her popcorn most of the time
5:20 The T REX says “When the dinosaurs ruled the earth”
No surprise they used Unix. Windows’s blue screen of death is way more terrifying than the velocirraptors
01:30 what I found funny is why does the computer have a lady in bikini while shutting off the doors.😂
Cause the jerk from earlier in the movie programmed it
Newman!
Because nedry was a pervert
Fatman was volcano
4:11 The way it just pops up from under the curtain is so funny to me 😂
Often wondered when Hammond screams over the phone, if it's a "Grant, are u ok?" scream or a "Grant, don't kill my raptors" scream...
I always thought he was screaming, “Don’t!”. So I thought it was a Don’t kill the raptors because they are so expensive scream! I still can’t hear “Grant”, but maybe it’s the accent.
No way 2 people are enough to stop the raptor from entering the door, its strength is formidable
Your body does amazing things when adrenaline kicks in
That's cause she was holding the door at the hinges for maximum leverage
Really efficient file system making you navigate around the folders like an early flight simulator.
Must've been some kind of Microsoft Bob system
FSN actually became a thing after this movie believe it or not... silicon Graphics finalised the program.
Interesting grip the Velociraptor has on the door @ 1:09 with both it's claws facing inward towards the door, because from that position all it could have done is PULL the door shut and not PUSH the door open.
Maybe the raptor was pushing the door with its body
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor It's standing directly in front of the door facing the window, and not sideways like a human would stand if he was pushing against it with his shoulder.
I'm curious where they got all the door handles that turn together. All doors I've seen with that style doorknob, they moved independently and one did not turn the other.
Literally a movie depicting a dinosaur opening a door, but you draw the line at it's hand coordination
@@drl5002 it's very common that handles on both sides of the door be connected by a square rod that runs through it
2:13 is the single greatest scream in Hollywood History…
June 11th, Jurassic Park 30th anniversary. Hold on to your butts. 🦖
IT'S A UNIX SYSTEM!!! I know this!!! What a great line ❤️🫡